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Brief History of Solar PV Technologies
Sunlight is the world’s largest energy source and for
thousands of years, it has been human civilizations chief source of light
and heat.
Today, solar energy technologies are being developed and refined to more
effectively use the sun’s power for producing electricity (photovoltaics),
as well as steam and hot water for industrial processes (solar thermal
technologies). In less than an hour, the India receives more energy in the
form of sunlight than it does from the fossil fuels it burns in a year.
The roots of PV energy grew out of experiments done over 150 years ago by
the French physicist Antoine-Cesar Becquerel in 1839. He observed that he
could produce an electric current by shining light on an electrolytic cell
composed on an electrolyte and two electrodes. The German scientist Heinrich
Hertz and other observed the PV effect – the conversion of light into
electricity – in solids during the 1870’s, and the first primitive PV cells
were built in the 1800s, with about 1-2 percent efficiencies. In 1954, Bell
Labs in the U.S. introduced the first solar photovoltaic device that
produced a useful amount of electricity, and by the late 1950s solar cells
were being used in small-scale scientific and commercial applications,
especially for the U.S. space program.
Photovoltaics, or PV for short, is a technology in which light is converted
into electricity using photovoltaic modules that have no moving parts,
operate quietly without emissions, and are capable on long-term use with
minimal maintenance. Crystalline silicon, the same material commonly used by
the semiconductor industry, is the material used in 94 % of all PV modules
today. PV modules generate direct current (DC) electricity. For residential
use, the current is fed through an inverter to produce alternating current
(AC) that can be used to power the home’s appliances. The main barrier to
widespread use of this technology is the initial high equipment cost. PV
technology was been advancing over the last few decades and prices have
steadily declined.
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CORPORATE IDENTITY

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OUR EASY CONTACTS
Email : info @ klsolar.com
Telephone : +91-9994404511
Fax :+91-422-2567562
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OUR POSTAL ADDRESS
KL Solar Company Pvt. Ltd.,
1/482-B,Transport Nagar,
Neelambur, Coimbatore,
Tamil Nadu, PIN : 641062
India.
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